Monthly Archives: May 2018

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“Plans fail for lack of counsel,
but with many advisers they succeed.” Proverbs 15:22

The Fanning the Flame team of St. Paul’s has completed a two day retreat with our coach. Ten members gathered for this time to plan together. I’m starting to see that what we are learning is a process–a way to think through our dreams, our options, our opportunities; a way to look realistically at our strengths and weaknesses. No one person was in charge (no, not even the pastor!) and Joe, our coach, stressed that he is our servant–here to guide us through the exercises, not to make decisions for us.

We came away with our core values:

The Bible is the final authority and norm for all that we teach and do

A congregational church polity

Adherence to the Lutheran confessions

We also established priorities for our Pastor (and he did have veto power on these):

Worship

Leadership Development & Deployment

Shepherding

Discipleship

Prayer

We began considering strategies for the areas we want to improve, and this will continue and become more detailed over the upcoming month. We’ve been divided into two team of five, each team to refine and clarify our goals and strategies.

Is anything we’ve come up with new, or even something we didn’t already realize. Probably not. The difference is that we’re taking the time to talk, to plan and to hold one another accountable for the goals we set.

I’ll be telling you more about the process as we continue so keep praying readers!

Like this:

Brian Dembowczyk has written a book that reviews 200 basic questions about God, Jesus, the Church and pretty much any basic theological question you can imagine. He starts of with a letter to parents about why he wrote the book and how to use it to develop a spiritual nature in their children.

The book is colorful and interesting in its format It is broken into 7 sections. The sections are listed below:

God

Creation

Sin

Jesus

Salvation

The Bible

Discipleship

The Church and Last Things

Even though the questions and answers are a simple format and are geared towards children; I feel that this book would work well with anyone who is new to the faith or would like to renew the knowledge they have.

I found the answers simple, correct and to the point, and since I prefer books that are straight to the point I enjoyed this one.

Keep in mind this book is to be used as a family unit, you are not to give the book to someone and walk away, it is an interactive study to expand and deepen the knowledge a person has of their spiritual walk.

I rate this book 5 out of 5 stars and would recommend it as required family reading.

I was given a free copy of this book in return for an unbiased review.

Like this:

“If I speak in the tongues of men and angels, but have not love, I am only a resounding gong or a clanging cymbal. If I have the gift of prophecy and can fathom all mysteries and all knowledge, and I have a faith that can move mountains, but have not love, I am nothing. If I give all I possess to the poor and surrender my body to the flames, but have not love, I gain nothing.” 1 Corinthians 13:1-3

Without love for God and for others there is no true piety. All our pious actions are worthless if they are not motivated by love — love for God and love for others. This is what Jesus was trying to tell the Pharisees and what Paul is teaching us here.

God is love. If we, as followers, are to reflect His nature to the world, we, too must be loving. Not just to our family and friends, but to everyone we meet, and yes, even to those who seem completely unlovable. Not to earn God’s approval, not because He needs our love, simply out of gratitude for the grace and mercy He extends to each of us.

This goes back to Beth Ann’s post about personal piety. Truly pious people are not looking for a reward. They don’t need to attract attention or be held up as shining examples of sainthood. Pious people have internalized Christ’s character. They are humble and unassuming. They are focused. The engine that drives them is simply love. Guess what? If you think you’re pious, you’re not there yet!

Will we ever become truly and 100% pious? Not in this life. That’s why Lutherans think of piety as an ideal, and sanctification as a process. The more we study, pray and worship, the more we walk and talk with Christ, the more like Him we’ll become. Love will be our motive.

Like this:

We’ve been blogging about piety this month and my thought is this: What does it look like in real terms? I usually get this vision of a person standing or kneeling with their hands together as in prayer with this light shining off them or a halo over their heads. Hmmm, maybe not. OK, how about someone who is always doing something “Godly” like going to church, doing good deeds for others…. No… How about a monk or a nun who never leave the convent or cloister?

Since we live in a world where we can’t all just run to the nearest convent or cloister, we have to look at this from a real-world view. We can’t withdraw from the world and spend all our time praying to the Lord and studying the Word. We need to support ourselves and our families. So, what do we do? What does piety really look like and how do we go about starting to live this way?

Let me preface this with the statement that this is my personal view on piety. I’m still working this out in my own life, believe me, it’s a process and I know that I’ll never see an end to it. Why? Because there is no end until Jesus returns.

Piety is personal and is between a person and God. A person may think that if they do an hour of devotionals in the morning and an hour of Bible study every evening, go to church 2,3, or however times during the week, that they are “pious”. Not that doing all that is bad, that’s not what I’m saying. But why are you doing it? Are you doing all that to impress God? You want a gold star at the end of the world and a pat on the head? That’s not going to happen. Doing “works” is good only if it comes from the right place in your heart. Doing something to impress God or others doesn’t cut it. Jesus said it like this:

“And when you pray, you must not be like the hypocrites. For they love to stand and pray in the synagogues and at the street corners, that they may be seen by others. Truly, I say to you, they have received their reward. But when you pray, go into your room and shut the door and pray to your Father who is in secret. And your Father who sees in secret will reward you. Matthew 6:5-6

I think that passage says more about personal piety than anything I’ve seen. Pray in secret. Just between you and God. Stay humble. Go to church, study the Bible, pray, do devotionals everyday or when you can. Work it out in your life. But keep it between you and God. Cause when you start looking for pats on the head is when you are doing all this for the wrong reason.

Like this:

I loved this book. The illustrations by Cornelius Van Wright and his wife, Ying-Hwa Hu are delightful. Author Dorena Williamson presents her theme (we are all fearfully and wonderfully made) in a way that is winsome, realistic and easily understandable to young children. God must love color! It is part of the wonder of His creation: in plants, food, the world around us, and people. We shouldn’t strive to be “color blind.” Instead we should notice and admire the different colors of our skin, hair and eyes. Is your hair red, brown or blonde? Are your eyes brown or green? Is your skin chocolate, vanilla or caramel? God made us ColorFull, not ColorLess. All of our colors are beautiful and good. That’s the way God made us to be and everything He created is good.

At the end of the book the author has included a Bible verse with suggested Scripture readings and thought questions that will be useful for parents and teachers who want to further explore and reinforce the topic.

Verdict: Five stars! This book will definitely go in our church’s Little Free Library collection. To order, follow the link below:

Like this:

“Two men went up into the temple to pray; one a Pharisee and the other a tax collector. The Pharisee standing by himself prayed thus: ‘God, I thank you that I am not like other men, extortioners, unjust, adulterers, or even like this tax collector. I fast twice a week, I give tithes of all that I get.’ But the tax collector standing far off, would not even lift up his eyes to heaven, but beat his breast saying, ‘God, be merciful to me, a sinner.’ I tell you, this man went down to his house justified, rather than the other.” Luke 18:10-14

The Pharisee is this parable is an example of what the Via de Cristo talk Piety talk calls “Mechanical Mike.” He prayed, tithed and fasted because he was a Pharisee and that’s what Pharisees do. It was part of his routine. Not only that, it made him feel superior to others, those who did not have the same training and habits. Many “Christians” feel the same way. They go to church every week because their parents did, their spouse wants them to, it’s good for the kids, it’s a way to make business contacts, they get to associate with nice people. It’s just what they’ve always done. They think that being part of a Christian congregation and doing all the right “religious” things makes them an exemplary example, a pillar of the community. In reality, they don’t have a real relationship with God and are without a clue about how to get one.

The tax collector wasn’t doing the right things, but he had the right attitude. He recognized his sin and God’s gracious mercy. His focus was on God, not his own works. This is a starting point for authentic piety.

It’s easy to fall into the “routine” if you’ve been a Christian for many years, we all do it. We sing and recite the creeds, we say certain prayers by rote, we set aside our weekly offering — we may even feel pretty righteous about doing this. The problem is, we’ve forgotten about the God we’re supposedly worshipping with our actions.

How can we avoid this sort of false piety? One way is to periodically do an examination of conscience. This can serve to remind us of how sinful we really are. Realizing how much we need Christ will quickly direct our attention to Him (there’s nothing like desperation to focus us). Christian friends can help, too. How are others praying? Studying? Serving? Maybe we need to break our routine and try something new. Christian friends inspire and admonish us.

Like this:

“As obedient children, do not be conformed to the passions of your former ignorance, but as he who called you is holy, you also be holy in all your conduct, since it is written, ‘You shall be holy, for I am holy.'” 1 Peter 1:14-16

I just started reading a book titled, In His Image by Jen Wilken, and the first chapter is about holiness. Although holiness is an attribute of God, it is also a quality we need to reflect as God’s people. For humans, holiness means being set apart for God, devoted to God, pure in character — in other words, pious.

Most Christians want to know what God’s will is for them as individuals . What job should I take? Who should I marry? Where should I live? These are things we ask ourselves. According to Ms. Wilken, instead of these questions which all boil down to “What should I do?” we ought to be asking “Who should I be?”

The Bible does not tell us what is the right decision in every case. However, it does tell us quite a bit about who to be in every area of life. Here’s a quote from the book:

“Simply put, God’s will for your life is that you be holy. That you live a life of set-apartness. That, by the power of the Holy Spirit, you strive for utter purity of character (Heb.12:14). Every admonition contained in all of Scripture can be reduced to this. Every warning, every law, every encouragement bows to this overarching purpose. Every story of every figure in every corner of every book of the Bible is chanting this call. Be holy, for he is holy.”

If we are striving to be direct our life to God and His will for us, the other decisions will not loom so large. Piety is not about what we do. We can be holy in any job, any place, any marriage. The circumstances don’t matter, but who we are does.